How to Underwrite a Short-Term Rental Using Real Data

Most people buy short-term rentals based on excitement, Airbnb photos, or the promise of high cash flow. The problem is that most of the numbers they use are guesses. This is why many new hosts end up disappointed when their property underperforms. Proper underwriting removes uncertainty. When you underwrite a short-term rental using real data, you predict performance with accuracy, protect your downside, and choose deals that consistently produce strong returns.

Underwriting is not complicated. It is simply structured analysis using real market data. When you know how to evaluate demand, pricing, occupancy, and expenses correctly, you create a clear picture of what the property will actually produce.

Start With Market Level Analysis

Before analyzing a specific property, verify that the market itself is viable. Look at:

•Tourism drivers
•Business travel demand
•Seasonality trends
•Event schedules
•Hotel occupancy trends
•Regulation stability
•Average nightly rates
•Average occupancy for similar homes

A good market shows steady demand and healthy year-round travel activity. It should not rely on a single season or event.

Compare Comparable STRs

Find comparable properties within a one to two-mile radius. Use data tools or platform research to locate homes with:

•Similar bedroom count
•Similar location
•Similar amenities
•Similar design quality
•Similar property type

Analyze their:

•Pricing
•Occupancy
•Seasonality
•Booking patterns
•Review volume
•Guest sentiment
•Calendar gaps
•Amenity lists

This tells you how your property will realistically perform.

Use Data Tools for Accuracy

Data-driven underwriting relies on tools that track occupancy and pricing. Use sources that show true booking data, not just advertised pricing.

Review key indicators:

•Average daily rate
•Median daily rate
•Booking lead times
•High season vs low season ADR
•Peak demand weekends
•Monthly occupancy
•Top performing properties
• Bottom-performing properties

Analyze the spread. Your property should fall somewhere around the median unless you plan to remodel or add premium amenities.

Calculate Revenue Using Realistic Numbers

Once you know the median ADR and occupancy, plug in conservative estimates. Most new investors overestimate revenue. Instead, run three scenarios:

Base case
•Median ADR x median occupancy
•This is your most realistic projection.

Downside case
•10 percent lower ADR and 10 percent lower occupancy
•This tells you the worst likely outcome.

Upside case
•Top quartile ADR and occupancy
•This shows what is possible if you outperform.

Start your underwriting with the base case. If the deal only works in the upside-down scenario, walk away.

Factor in Seasonality

Short-term rentals rarely produce consistent monthly revenue. Evaluate seasonal revenue patterns:

•High season
•Low season
•Shoulder season
•Holiday pricing
• Event-driven spikes

Calculate revenue month by month instead of using one annual average. This gives you a realistic cash flow schedule.

Analyze Expenses Accurately

Expenses make or break an STR. Underwrite using real costs, not assumptions.

Key expenses include:

•Mortgage
•Property taxes
•Utilities
•Insurance
•Cleaning fees
•Management fees (even if self-managed, budget for it)
•Supplies
•Repairs
•Maintenance
•Capex
•Software and tools
•HOA fees
•Trash
•Internet

Do not underestimate utilities. Heating and cooling costs can be significantly higher in an STR due to constant turnover.

Calculate Cleaning and Turnover Costs

Cleaning is one of the top expenses. Estimate the number of turns per month by using your occupancy projections and average stay length.

If you project 18 booked nights per month with an average stay of 3 nights, expect around 6 turnovers. Multiply the cleaning cost by the number of turns to get your true monthly cleaning expense.

Add a Capex Reserve

STRs experience heavier wear and tear than long-term rentals. Build a capex reserve of 5 to 10 percent of gross revenue for long-term upgrades.

Examples include:

•Furniture replacement
•Painting
•Flooring
•HVAC units
•Roofing
•Major appliance repair or replacement
•Outdoor upgrades

This reserve protects your cash flow over time.

Calculate Net Operating Income

Net operating income (NOI) tells you how the property performs before financing.

•Gross revenue
•minus cleaning
•minus utilities
•minus supplies
•minus maintenance
•minus management
•minus software
•minus capex reserve
•equals NOI

This number determines whether the property produces strong returns independent of the loan structure.

Estimate Cash Flow With Financing

After calculating NOI, plug in your financing details:

•Loan amount
•Interest rate
•Loan type
•Mortgage insurance (if applicable)
•Escrowed taxes and insurance

Subtract monthly loan payments from NOI to calculate true cash flow.

Run Sensitivity Scenarios

Stress test the deal by adjusting:

•ADR down 10 percent
•Occupancy down 10 percent
•Cleaning up 10 percent
•Utilities up 15 percent
•Management added if you self-manage

If cash flow remains positive or neutral in stress tests, the deal is strong.

Identify Value-Add Opportunities

Underwrite based on existing performance and then account for potential improvements:

•Amenity upgrades
•Professional staging
•Hot tub
•Game room
•Workspace
•Better photography
•Improved bedding
•Fire pit
•Outdoor lighting
• Pet-friendly setup

Value-add strategies can raise ADR and occupancy significantly.

Check Regulation Stability

A strong STR investment requires regulatory certainty. Review:

•City ordinances
•County rules
•Permit requirements
•Density caps
•Owner occupancy rules
•Nightly stay restrictions
•Zoning maps

If regulations are unclear or likely to tighten, factor that risk into your analysis.

Evaluate Opportunity Cost

Compare the property to other deals:

•Does this property produce more cash flow?
•Does it have better appreciation potential?
•Does it offer more design or amenity upside?
•Does it fit your portfolio strategy?
•Is it worth committing capital here?

Opportunity cost helps ensure you pick the best deal, not just a good one.

Use Real-Time Booking Data to Adjust Projections

Before closing, monitor booking pace and competitor pricing weekly. Market conditions shift quickly. Update your underwriting as new data emerges. This gives you the most accurate picture at closing time.

Underwriting With Real Data Protects You

When you underwrite a short-term rental using real data, you eliminate guesswork and emotion. You make decisions based on facts. You choose properties that perform consistently. You avoid surprises and reduce risk.

Underwriting is the foundation of wealth building in STRs. With strong analysis, every new purchase becomes safer, smarter, and more profitable. You can visit my website, drconnorrobertson.com.


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